Swords of Haven: The Adventures of Hawk & Fisher

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Swords of Haven: The Adventures of Hawk & Fisher Page 51

by Green, Simon R.

“Take your friend and get out of here,” he said calmly. “I don’t want to see your faces again. Is that clear?”

  They nodded quickly, and half led, half carried their friend away. Hawk watched them go. The trick to situations like that was to take out the leader as quickly and as painfully as possible. It’s not a question of what you do, as what you make them think you’re prepared to do. Take control of the situation away from them. Make them sweat. Make them afraid. You learn things like that in Haven. He looked casually around him, but the incident had passed so quickly that no one seemed to have noticed anything. He turned back to Sinclair, who was studying him thoughtfully.

  “You know, that really was very impressive,” said Sinclair. “I wish I could do things like that.”

  “You could learn,” said Hawk.

  “No, I don’t think so. It probably involves a lot of things like practice and discipline and hard work. Not really me, I’m afraid. Did you know you have blood on your chin?”

  Hawk took out his handkerchief and wiped carefully at his mouth and chin. “You have to be able to stand up for yourself. It helps keep the flies off.”

  Sinclair smiled. “Like I said, not really me. It’s not important. You see, I don’t matter. Not to anyone. Never have and never will.” He stopped, and looked at Hawk. “Is something wrong, Captain?”

  “No. You just reminded me of someone I used to know. Someone who felt like that.”

  “What happened to him?”

  Hawk looked across at Fisher, on the other side of the room. “He found someone who believed in him.”

  Fisher had found herself to be very popular. Young men gathered around her, plying her with drinks and sweets and smiles, and vying with each other for her attention. The young rakes and blades were always on the lookout for a new pretty face, the more exotic the better. And compared to the carefully groomed and painted flowers of the Quality, the six-foot muscular blonde in the Guard’s cloak seemed very exotic indeed. The female members of the Quality seemed caught between ostentatiously ignoring her and glaring at her when her back was turned.

  Fisher didn’t care much for the Quality, singly or en masse. More money than they knew what to do with, and nothing to give their lives meaning except an endless round of love affairs, duels, and Family vendettas. The ones with any guts went into the army; these here at the party were the ones who’d stayed behind. Which was why they joined the Hellfire Club. Their lives were so empty that there was nothing left but to play at being bad in the hopes of shocking each other, or at least their parents.

  Fisher pumped the young men unobtrusively with leading questions, but didn’t get much in the way of answers. The Quality were too busy making fools of themselves trying to impress her. They began to get on her nerves after a while, and when hints that she’d prefer to be left alone fell on deaf ears, she started to wonder if punching out one or two of them might help to get her message across. She’d just selected her first target, when a loud confident voice cut across the young men’s babble, and quickly sent them all packing.

  Fisher looked her rescuer over carefully. He was a little taller than she, elegantly slender, and dressed in well-cut, sombre clothes. He was in his late twenties at most, and good-looking in a dark, traditional way, though there was a self-satisfied look to his eyes and mouth that Fisher didn’t like.

  “Lord Graham Brunel, at your service,” he said smoothly. “I do hope those boys weren’t bothering you too much. I’m afraid the Club has grown so popular now that we seem to be letting just anyone in. I’ll have to speak to Louis about it. Now, may I know your name, dear lady?”

  “Isobel,” said Fisher carefully. “This is my first time here.”

  “Yes, I thought it must be,” said Brunel. “I’m sure I’d have remembered so distinctive a beauty as yourself if we’d met before. That is a Guard’s cloak you’re wearing, isn’t it? Is it the real thing, by any chance?”

  “Oh, yes,” said Fisher. “It’s real.”

  “You really must tell me how you came by it. I’m sure it’s a fascinating story.”

  “You wouldn’t believe how fascinating,” said Fisher. “Have you been with the Hellfire Club long?”

  “Almost from the beginning, my dear. Arthur Sinclair came up with the idea originally, bless his booze-rotted brain, but it was Louis Hightower and I who brought the Club together and made it what it is.”

  “But have you achieved any results?” said Fisher.

  “You’d be surprised,” said Brunel. “We’re getting close to something very powerful, Isobel. I can feel it. Something so awful and magnificent it’ll tear this dreary little city apart. But there’s nothing to be worried about, my dear, I promise you. You just stay close to me, and I’ll keep you safe.”

  “That’s very kind of you,” said Fisher, “But I already have an escort.”

  “Drop him. You’re with me now.”

  Fisher smiled at him. “Fancy yourself, don’t you?”

  Brunel looked at her uncertainly. “I beg your pardon?”

  “You haven’t achieved anything, have you, Brunel? In all the time you’ve been running this Club, have you raised a single demon, contacted a Power, or even managed to make the lights flicker a little?” She paused a moment while Brunel went red in the face and struggled for words. “I thought not. The Hellfire Club, when you get right down to it, is just another game. Another excuse to get dressed up, drink too much, and have a good time jumping at shadows. Just a bunch of overgrown kids. I don’t think I’ll be staying.”

  Brunel reached out quickly and took her by the arm. “Oh, but I really must insist, my dear. You’ve been asking a lot of questions, but you haven’t told, us anything about yourself. I think it’s time you told me who you really are.”

  Fisher slowly raised her arm despite his hold, and showed him the silver torc at her wrist. “Isobel Fisher, Captain of the city Guard. Now get your hand off me or I’ll break your fingers.”

  Brunel’s face was suddenly harsh and ugly, all charm fled. His fingers dug into her arm muscle, trying to hurt her. “A spy. A dirty stinking Council spy. You’re not going anywhere, Captain. We can use you, in the Hellfire Club. Some of us have been wondering if a human sacrifice might not be just what we need, to make the breakthrough we’ve been looking for. We were going to use one of the servants, someone who wouldn’t be missed, but you’ll do nicely. No one’s going to miss you; no one even knows you’re here, right?”

  Fisher smiled at him. “I think this has gone far enough.” She reached out with her free hand and clapped him on the shoulder. Her thumb found the exposed nerve behind the collarbone, and pressed down hard. Brunel’s face screwed up as the pain hit him, and his hold on her arm loosened. She shrugged free of him, and pulled his face close to hers. Brunel tried to pull away, but the stabbing pain paralysed him.

  “No human sacrifice, Brunel. Not tonight or any other night. The Guard’s going to keep a close watch on you from now on. And if we even suspect you’re thinking about a human sacrifice, we’ll come back here in force and drag each and every one of you out of here in chains. We’ve left you alone because you’re harmless. Stay that way, or I guarantee you’ll spend the rest of your days walking the treadmill under the city gaol. Got it?”

  She let him go and he staggered back a pace, clutching at his shoulder. He tried to scowl at her, but couldn’t meet her eyes. He turned and disappeared into the crowd, and was swallowed up in a moment. This is a waste of time, thought Fisher. We’re not going to find our God killer here. She looked around her for Hawk and Buchan.

  Buchan wandered through a crowd of averted faces, feeling not unlike the ghost at the feast. Word of his arrival had circulated quickly through the gathering. Backs turned at his approach, and murmurs rose and fell as he passed. The Quality, young or old, liked to think of itself as being above petty moralities and restrictions, but when you got right down to it, their affairs and debaucheries still followed very strict guidelines. For all the freedom that
wealth and position brings, there remained things that were simply not done. And when it came to matters of Family and inheritance, the Quality were very conservative. Wives and children were important; they continued and preserved the precious bloodlines, without which there would be no hundred Families, no Quality. So for an only son, the last of his line, to turn his back on marriage and make regular visits to the Sisters of Joy was simply unacceptable.

  There was a stir in the crowd to his left, and Buchan looked round in mild surprise to find someone approaching him. His first thought was that he was about to be asked to leave, but as the crowd fell away he saw that it was the party’s host, Lord Louis Hightower. Buchan winced mentally though his face remained impassive.

  The Lord Hightower was of average height and stockily built, much like his late father. As a second son, he had been spending a quiet and not unsuccessful life in the army when his father and mother died in the same night, victims of a werewolf’s curse. His elder brother had been murdered some months previously. So he resigned his commission and came home, and now he was the Lord Hightower, one of the leading lights in the Quality and chief organizer of the Hellfire Club. He and Buchan were the same age, and had been friends, once. Buchan waited for Hightower to come to him, and then bowed politely. He was ready for almost anything except the sad, exasperated sigh with which Hightower greeted him.

  “What the devil are you doing here, Charles? I wouldn’t have thought this Hellfire nonsense was in your line.”

  “It isn’t,” said Buchan. “But it may have a connection with a case I’m working on for the Squad. And what do you mean by calling it nonsense? I thought you were one of the people running the Club.”

  Hightower shrugged. “It’s amusing. And interesting, sometimes. But I don’t get carried away with it, like some people I could mention. I might have known it would take something like this to bring you back here.” Hightower looked at him steadily. “It’s been a long time, Charles. Too long.”

  Buchan smiled. “Not everyone would agree with you, Louis. I don’t go where I’m not welcome. I have that much pride left.”

  “You’re always welcome in my home, Charles. You know that.”

  “Yes. But my presence in your house would do you no good at all. People would talk.”

  “Let them. You think I care more about my reputation than my friends?”

  “You have a position to maintain now,” said Buchan firmly. “You’re not just a second son any longer. You’re the Hightower, the head of the Family. You have responsibilities to them now, as well as yourself. And to whatever poor woman you eventually decide to marry. You shouldn’t even be talking to me, really.”

  “As head of the Family, I do have some authority. People may mutter, but they won’t say anything. Not in public. It’s good to see you again, Charles. I saw your mother last week. She’s looking well. Are they still not talking to you?”

  “As far as I know. I haven’t been back there in a while, either. As far as they’re concerned, I don’t exist. And perhaps that’s for the best.”

  “Are you still ... ?”

  “Visiting the Sisters? Yes.”

  “They’ll destroy you, Charles. They destroy all their victims, in the end.” Hightower took in Buchan’s face, and raised a hand defensively. “All right, I know. You don’t want to talk about it. And I can’t ask you about the case you’re working on, because you never talk about that, either. Is there anything you do feel free to discuss?”

  “I was sorry to hear about your parents, Louis. It must have been a shock.”

  “Yes, it was. The funny thing is, I’d been expecting my father’s death for some time. He’d been looking old and tired ever since Paul was murdered. You never knew my brother, did you? He was a good sort, and always too brave for his own good. Father thought the world of him. He took Paul’s death hard.

  “He hated being retired, too. Didn’t know what to do with himself after he left the army. Dabbled in politics for a while, but ... I was out of town when he and mother died, on manoeuvres. I miss them, you know. Every day there’s something that makes me think I’d better ask Dad about that, or I wonder what Mother would say... and then I remember, and the day seems a little colder. I miss them, Charles. I really miss them.”

  “You ought to get married,” said Buchan firmly. “It’s not sensible, you and the servants rattling around in this huge old place by yourself. Get yourself a wife and fill the place with children. Do you a world of good.”

  Hightower laughed. “Just like the rest of my Family. Can’t wait to see me safely married and settled down. I always said I’d only marry for love, Charles; never just for duty. You can understand that, can’t you?”

  “Yes,” said Buchan. “I understand.”

  They stood together a moment, wanting to say more, but not sure how. They’d pretty much exhausted the few things they still had in common, and what remained of their lives now was separated by a gulf neither of them could cross.

  “So,” said Hightower finally. “Is there anything you can tell me about the God Squad business that brings you here?”

  “You’ve heard about the God murders, I take it? Well, my associates turned up a lead that suggested there may be a connection between the Hellfire Club and the killings.”

  “I don’t see how,” said Hightower. “It’s all a lark, nothing more. Just another excuse for a party. The rituals are fun, but no one seriously expects anything to come of them. Well, most of us don’t, anyway. There are always a few idiots. But most of the Club are only here to annoy their Families. A sign of rebellion, without having to risk anything that matters.”

  “What got you involved?” said Buchan. “I wouldn’t have thought this was your kind of thing.”

  “It isn’t. But there are a great many young ladies who are interested, so ...”

  Buchan laughed. “I might have known. Is it true most of your rituals take place in the nude?”

  “Quite a few of them, yes.” Hightower grinned. “And that’s not all we do in the rituals that our Families wouldn’t approve of.”

  They laughed together, and then the double doors burst open and a sudden silence fell across the room as everyone turned to look.

  The Dark Man stood in the doorway. Blood splashed his shapeless furs and dripped thickly from both ends of the long wooden staff in his hands. He was grinning broadly, and his eyes were fixed and wild. He looked slowly round the crowded ballroom, and the Quality fell back before his unwavering gaze. Death and violence hung around him like a shroud. In the silence that greeted his arrival they could hear voices moaning and crying out in pain from the corridor outside. Hawk and Fisher pushed their way through the crowd toward him, blades at the ready.

  A man-at-arms appeared behind the Dark Man. Bruised and bleeding heavily, he nevertheless flung himself at the Dark Man and tried to get a choke hold on him. They staggered back and forth for a moment, and then the Dark Man twisted suddenly and threw the man-at-arms over his shoulder. He hit the floor hard and lay still, groaning quietly. The Dark Man raised his staff and brought it sweeping down with vicious force, striking his victim again and again and again. Blood flew and bones shattered. The limp body jumped and jerked under the rain of blows, even after the man was clearly dead.

  There were stifled screams and moans of horror from the Quality, and a few of the braver men moved forward. Hawk yelled for them to stay back. The Dark Man slowly raised his head and grinned at those advancing on him. There was blood on his face, none of it his. The handful of men slowed to a halt and looked at each other uncertainly.

  “Dammit, stay where you are!” yelled Hawk, his voice cutting across the rising babble. “He’s too dangerous! I’m city Guard. My partner and I will take care of him.”

  The Quality moved quickly to get out of the Guards’ way. The Dark Man grinned bloodily and threw himself at those still between him and his intended victims. He struck out furiously with his staff, not caring who he hit, and men and women alike
fell to the polished floor with broken heads and stove-in ribs. The Quality began screaming again, and fought each other in their panic to get out of the Dark Man’s way as he headed toward Hawk and Fisher. A handful of men threw themselves at the killer, but he shrugged them off easily, not even feeling their fists. One of them grabbed at the Dark Man’s leg from the floor. Without looking down, the Dark Man kicked the man free, and then stamped viciously on his chest. The man lay still, and the Dark Man moved on. The rest of the Quality hung back. It would have been different if they’d had weapons, but wearing weapons in a friend’s house wasn’t done. So they’d all left their swords at the door.

  And then finally Hawk and Fisher reached the Dark Man, and his grin widened. He threw himself forward, swinging his staff in a powerful horizontal arc. Fisher ducked under it and ran the Dark Man through, her sword blade grating between his ribs. His grin never wavered, and he struck at her arm with his staff. Fisher’s hand went numb and she had to jump back, leaving her sword wedged in the Dark Man’s ribs. Blood ran thickly down his sides, but he took no notice of it, his eyes following Fisher as she backed away.

  Hawk stepped in and swung his axe from the killer’s blind side. The Dark Man spun round at the last moment and parried the blow with his staff. The impact almost wrenched the axe from Hawk’s hand. The two men circled each other warily, searching for an opening. Hawk felt a sudden chill rush through him, as he realised the Dark Man was a better fighter now than he had been the first few times they’d met. It was as though he was learning with each new fight, each new death ... as though each new Dark Man was the same man....

  What the hell am I fighting here?

  He misjudged a blow with his axe, and the end of the staff clipped him just above the ear in passing. The world rocked around him for an instant, and the Dark Man pressed forward. Hawk backed away quickly, holding onto his axe more by instinct than anything else. The Dark Man swung his staff, and Hawk ducked at the last moment. He stumbled, off balance, and looked up just in time to see the staff coming round on the backswing for a blow that would crack his skull like an eggshell. There wasn’t even time to close his eye.

 

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